
Moulds Increase Severity of Asthma
LONDON, ENGLAND -- Severe asthma in adults may be associated with sensitivity
to airborne moulds rather than pollens, finds a study in this week's British
Medical Journal.
Researchers used data from 1,132 people with asthma from the European
Community respiratory health survey to access whether the severity of
asthma is associated with sensitization to airborne moulds rather than
to other allergens, such as pollens and cats.
Sensitization to moulds was significantly associated with severity of
asthma, but the team found no association between severity of asthma and
sensitization to pollens or cats.
The small size of fungal spores may allow them to reach the lower airways,
suggest the authors. Unlike pollens, moulds are also present through the
year with increase in the spore counts during the autumn months. Furthermore,
the level of mould exposure is probably greater because the exposure occurs
indoors rather than outdoors and people spend most of their time indoors.
Those people with asthma who are sensitized to airborne moulds should
be educated to pay careful attention to symptoms and comply with treatment,
particularly during the seasonal increase in mould spore counts, say the
authors.
Patients should also be encouraged to decrease exposure by avoiding
indoor conditions that facilitate the growth of moulds -- for example,
by better ventilation and by decreasing dampness, they conclude.
SOURCE: British Medical Journal, August 23, 2002
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